Compiling Quantum Circuits for Dynamically Field-Programmable Neutral Atoms Array Processors
Daniel Bochen Tan, Dolev Bluvstein, Mikhail D. Lukin, Jason Cong

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel compiler for dynamically reconfigurable neutral atom quantum processors, optimizing circuit layout and reducing entangling gates, thus enhancing scalability and performance for complex quantum circuits.
Contribution
It introduces a satisfiability-based layout synthesis method and a hybrid heuristic for DPQA architectures, improving circuit depth and scalability over fixed architectures.
Findings
Reduces two-qubit gates by 1.7x on small instances
Achieves 5.1x fewer gates for 90-qubit circuits
Enables complex quantum circuits on programmable neutral atom hardware
Abstract
Dynamically field-programmable qubit arrays (DPQA) have recently emerged as a promising platform for quantum information processing. In DPQA, atomic qubits are selectively loaded into arrays of optical traps that can be reconfigured during the computation itself. Leveraging qubit transport and parallel, entangling quantum operations, different pairs of qubits, even those initially far away, can be entangled at different stages of the quantum program execution. Such reconfigurability and non-local connectivity present new challenges for compilation, especially in the layout synthesis step which places and routes the qubits and schedules the gates. In this paper, we consider a DPQA architecture that contains multiple arrays and supports 2D array movements, representing cutting-edge experimental platforms. Within this architecture, we discretize the state space and formulate layout…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
